Bartoň-Dobenín (entrepreneurial family)

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The entrepreneurial family Bartoň-Dobenín (until 1912 Bartoň , then until 1918 Bartoň von Dobenin ; Czech Bartoňové z Dobenína ) were successful textile producers in the East Bohemian area around Náchod . As early as 1908, the company, which at that time was considered the most modern in Europe, employed around 800 workers in its factories in Staré Město nad Metují ( Old Town ) and Bražec ( Braschetz ). The senior boss Josef Bartoň was given the title "Knight of Dobenín" by Emperor Franz Joseph I in 1912 because of his successful business activities and for his commitment to the common good . The survey also applied to his descendants. Until 1918 they were one of the youngest noble families in Bohemia or the Austro-Hungarian monarchy . Since the establishment of Czechoslovakia and the abolition of the nobility predicates in 1918, they have been using the Bartoň-Dobenín spelling for their family names . After the communists came to power, they were expropriated in 1945 and 1948 respectively. Since the restitution after the Velvet Revolution , the Bartoň company has again been based in Náchod. It operates as "Bartoň, textilni závody, as"

Master list (not complete)

The family comes from Vysoká Srbská ( Hochsichel ) in the area around Náchod , where the Barton line can be traced back to 1635.

One of the ancestors of the Bartoň family is Václav ( Wenzel ) Bartoň, who married in Žďárky in 1762.

  1. The progenitor Josef Bartoň (born March 13, 1803 in Žďárky ( Kleinbrand ), † January 12, 1849 in Hochsichel) initially worked as a house weaver. After marrying in 1829, he took over his parents' cottage in Vysoká Srbská in 1835 . There he operated two looms. He sold the woven cotton and linen fabrics at weekly markets in Politz , Starkenbach and Náchod. He also bought woven goods from other weavers, to whom he gave the appropriate yarn. In 1842 he acquired the Seidl-Bleiche ( Sejdlovské bélidlo ) in Vysoká Srbská from Josef Falta , which he expanded to include a textile dyeing factory. In 1845 he concluded an agreement with the Franz Balzar company from Kanitz for the supply of calico , which was refined in Bartoň's workshops. At times he employed up to 300 house weavers. In 1847 he took over the representation for the Dominik Knězek company in Mistek . Shortly before his death, he bought a farm in Ž erwárky, which he wanted to convert into a production facility. He left two underage sons: František and Josef, who inherited the bleach in Vysoká Srbská.
    1. František
    2. Josef Bartoň-Dobenín (1838–1920)
      1. Ladislav Bartoň-Dobenín (1858–1939)
      2. Josef Bartoň-Dobenín (1862–1951)
        1. Josef Bartoň-Dobenín (born June 9, 1897 in Vysoká Srbská). After graduating from high school, he was drafted into military service in 1915. He was injured on the Italian front, temporarily released and later transferred to the supply department in Vienna. After the war he completed a six-month internship in English textile companies. In 1920/21 he studied economics at the University of Frankfurt . After returning home, he practiced with his brother-in-law Rudolf Stein in Černožice ( Tschernoschitz ) in Okres Hradec Králové in 1922 . In 1923 he became a partner in his father's company with a share of 25%. In 1935, together with his cousin Alois Dinter from Náchod and his brother-in-law Jiří Čerych from Česká Skalice, he acquired the company "Českoskalická přadelna bavlny, mechanická tkalcovna, barvírna a tiskárna, spol. sro “, from the childless uncle Ladislav Bartoň-Dobenín . In 1936, his father transferred a further 15% of the company to him, so that he now owned 50%. On suspicion of a collaboration , he was expropriated in 1945 and his companies were nationalized.
        2. Václav Bartoň-Dobenín (born January 5, 1909 in Prague, † 1962 in Canada). After graduating from secondary school in Náchod, he studied law at Charles University in Prague , where he received his doctorate in 1933. Following his military service, he completed internships in France and England. From 1936 he became a 25% partner in his father's company. At the same time he was granted power of attorney . After the expropriation and nationalization of the factories, he continued to live with his family at the Nové Město nad Metují Castle . In 1951 he went into exile in Canada, where he died in 1962. After the political change , his son of the same name Josef Bartoň-Dobenín (* 1942) obtained a partial return of the Náchoder textile companies in the 1990s and subsequently founded the company "Bartoň, textilni závody, as", Náchod.
          1. Václav Bartoň-Dobenín (* 1938)
          2. Josef Marian Bartoň-Dobenín (* 1942); The Nové Město nad Metují Castle was restituted to him in the 1990s .
      3. Cyril Bartoň-Dobenín (1863–1953)
        1. Josef (1897–1972). Since 1923 he was part of the Bartoň company. After Cyril left in 1937, he took over his company shares.
      4. Arnošt Bartoň-Dobenín (born September 23, 1869 in Náchod, † December 5, 1906 in Častolovice ( Czastolowitz ), Reichenau an der Kněžna district ); until 1886 he learned the trade of textile dyer. He then attended the two-year textile school in Reichenberg , after which he worked as a company representative. After marrying Marie Julišová, daughter of a tradesman from Hořice v Podkrkonoší ( Horschitz ), he founded a company with Karl A. Tuček in Horschitz, for which they acquired extensive land and a former factory from Arnošt's father-in-law Juliš. They converted this into a mechanical weaving mill with 80 looms. It traded under the name "Hořická mechaniská tkalcovna, šlichtovna a úpravná Tuček a Bartoň". After the partners separated in 1902, Arnošt moved to Častolovice, where he died in 1906.

The Bartoň company archive for the years 1848–1942 is in the collection in the Zámrsk State Archives .

literature

  • Historická encyklopedie podnikatelů Čech, Moravy a Slezska , Ostrava 2003, ISBN 80-7042-612-8 , pp. 31–35.
  • Jana Novotná: Rod Bartoňů na zámku Nové hrady . Diploma thesis at the Charles University; Prague, 2010.
  • Lydia Baštecká and Ivana Ebelová: Náchod . Náchod 2004, ISBN 80-7106-674-5 , pp. 162-201.
  • Ivan Česka: Rod Bartoňů z Dobenína . In: Rodným Krajem . Issue 20, 2000, pp. 42-44; Issue 21, 2001, pp. 20-21; Issue 22, 2001, pp. 40-41; Issue 23, 2001, pp. 20-21.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The information on this is contradictory
  2. ^ Alexandr Skalický: Casa Barton a Náchod - Otakar Novotný . Florence 1999, p. 17 (English, partial view on Google Books )
  3. ^ History of Žďárky
  4. ↑ Day of death not apparent from the sources cited.
  5. ^ Zámrsk Archives